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Desert Hot Springs
"I had Splendor,"
purred my buddy Steve, looking
pleasantly woozy after his seaweed-wrap
spa treatment.
"Sure
looks it," I said.
"No," he corrected. "Splendor was the
masseuse's name."
Those who know the Coachella Valley
might be surprised to see "Desert Hot
Springs" and "splendor" on the same
page. Residents of Palm Springs and its
tony neighbors have long viewed this
city 20 minutes to the north as an
embarrassing cousin. If Palm Springs is
women in heels buying Brie at Jensen's
Finest Foods, Desert Hot Springs is
women in fuzzy bedroom slippers buying
Chips Ahoy at Stater Bros.
But Desert Hot Springs, population
15,000, has one thing much of the valley
doesn't: natural hot springs. Steve and
I travel frequently on business, and
earlier this month we wanted a place to
catch up and do nothing important. We
didn't expect a weekend quite so
convivial, subtly spiritual and stylish.
Although many lodgings here are past
their prime, some tiny properties have
been renovated with striking results. We
considered Hope Springs, where 1950s
design is matched with Eames and
Saarinen furniture, desert flora and
three mineral pools. But rooms here
($150 to $175) have only one bed; Steve
and I are close but not that close. We
also considered Two Bunch Palms ($175 to
$485 weekends) and Miracle Manor ($189
to $219 weekends), two of the town's
best-known retreats.
We ended up at Sagewater
Spa, which opened last
year on a hillside overlooking the
valley. This minimalist seven-room place
is full of right angles, white-on-white
décor with touches of sage, high beds
with Frette linens, in-room kitchens and
polished concrete floors. Weekend rates
start at $185 a night. We snagged
Sagewater's lone two-bed room, which was
more spacious and had an expanded
kitchen, for $250. That's almost as much
as luxury resorts down in the valley
charge in peak season, but Sagewater
turned out to be a real getaway --
smaller, less crowded, more personal.
Cristina Pestana, the proprietor, had
been "honey"-ing me in her lilting
Brazilian accent during phone calls
before our arrival, and our welcome was
just as warm. We were presented with a
small, aromatic loaf of coffee cake made
by Rhoni Epstein, Cristina's partner,
then shown to our room. Inside was a CD
player, TV and, blessedly, no phone
(although each room has a DSL
connection).
Steve wanted to pounce on the coffee
cake, but discipline prevailed. ("That's
breakfast food!" I snipped.) We drove a
few minutes to Casa Blanca, a comfy
Mexican cantina. Pacífico beer in iced
mugs went perfectly with the
restaurant's chunky fresh guacamole and
chipotle salsa. Combination plates were
huge and delicious: carne asada
sharing the plate with sautéed shrimp,
onion and bell pepper for me, enchiladas
for Steve.
After dinner we stopped at a supermarket
(scene of the fuzzy-slipper sightings)
for fruit and finally, under cover of
darkness, dipped into Sagewater's
mineral pool-within-a-pool, a 105-degree
hot tub inside a 90-degree swimming
pool. We stargazed with the other guests
-- Hollywood types and a congenial
couple of returning Sagewater guests
from Orange County. A cynic might have
sneered at a hot tub full of city
slickers trying to locate Polaris, but
everyone was mellow and accepting. After
Cristina turned off the lights outside
each room, all went quiet, and the stars
seemed as bright as could be.
Seaweed in Desert Hot
Springs's Sand -
continued
Splendor
in many forms
In such a minimalist
space, one has little
choice but to chill, and
chill we did the next
morning: lazing in the
pool, lazing out of the
pool, snoozing, eating
coffee cake (it lived up
to high expectations),
sipping cucumber water,
making new friends,
blissing out on medieval
polyphonic music.
So it went until Steve
looked up from his
magazine and said,
"Let's go to Joshua
Tree." Before the
45-minute drive, we
filled water bottles
from the tap. An aquifer
yields the town's
drinking water, which
has won national taste
tests (and really is
delicious).
Near the entrance to the
national park we stopped
at Crossroads Cafe,
where rough-hewn wood
walls and
folk-art-painted trim
felt right out of the
'60s. Our lunch, though,
was up to date: The
Grilled Coyote sandwich
-- chicken breast with
portabello mushroom,
apple-wood smoked bacon,
Jack and cheddar -- was
enjoyably messy and came
with a soup of artichoke
hearts, black olives and
tomato.
The landscape that
followed was just as
pleasing. If there's
such a thing as a Joshua
tree plantation, it
probably would look like
our route through the
park. The stubby-limbed
trees reached all the
way to distant rock
outcroppings scaled by
climbers. On a short
hike in Hidden Valley,
we paused to appreciate
the silence. Steve
termed the scenery
"God's art," a sentiment
echoed in a Robinson
Jeffers poem on a plaque
along the trail,
praising "the divine
beauty of the universe."
Soon
it was time for Splendor
of the human kind, and
we returned to Sagewater
for Steve's spa
treatment. If you think
spa visits sound girlie,
know that a 2002
International Spa Assn.
survey showed that 24%
of the clientele at U.S.
spas is male, and the
percentage is growing.
While Steve was being
seaweed-wrapped, I
walked 50 yards to tour
Cabot's Pueblo Museum.
It's named after Cabot
Yerxa (born 1883), a
colorful adventurer,
tradesman and descendant
of the Boston Cabots.
Yerxa homesteaded here
in 1913. For a year he
and his beloved burro,
Merry Christmas, rode
out of town to fetch
drinking water until an
American Indian told him
about local springs.
Yerxa drilled for water
and, atop hot and cold
aquifers, built a
pueblo-style home that
looks like an orderly
pile of boxes. When he
died in 1965, the rooms
totaled 35.
Back at the Sagewater
pool, as sunset tinted
the sky pink, Cristina
and Rhoni served
caipirinhas -- sweet,
juiced with lime and
very Brazilian. The pool
was their parlor, they
were our hostesses and
we were a party. Guests
shared snacks and drinks
and would have barbecued
dinner together had not
the desert winds kicked
up.
So
some of us drove a few
minutes to Capri, a
steakhouse that reminded
the Northeasterners
among us of the Italian
places we had grown up
with. Entrees come with
soup and salad plus a
side of pasta. Even if I
didn't love the overly
sweet Marsala sauce on
my veal, everyone else
seemed to enjoy their
dinners, especially the
steak.
Given the huge meal, no
wonder we were asleep
the moment we hit the
beds, dreaming of
mineral baths, massages,
great winds and the
universe. That put us in
the mood the next
morning to visit the
Integratron, on a swatch
of desert in Landers
about 45 minutes north.
The Integratron was
built by George Van
Tassel (1910-1978), a
test pilot and inventor
who claimed to have been
visited by beings from
Venus -- not the planet,
but some other Venus.
(We didn't understand
either.) He built this
dome, 38 feet high and
50 feet in diameter, as
a "high voltage
electrostatic generator
that would supply a
broad range of
frequencies to recharge
the cell structure." In
other words,
electroshock
rejuvenation and, he
hoped, time travel.
The Integratron never
was operational. Today
it's a museum and a
venue for "sound baths"
under its acoustically
marvelous dome. Group
sound baths, $7 a
person, are held the
first three Sundays of
the month.
A docent used dowels to
generate soothing sounds
from seven crystal bowls
ranging from as small as
a grapefruit to as large
as a barrel. Each sound
is said to resonate with
a specific body part,
and the effects
supposedly fall
somewhere between cosmic
bliss and cranking your
favorite song on the car
radio. Some visitors,
the docent said, feel as
if they're being
massaged. I didn't
experience those
effects, although I
enjoyed being lost in
the moment. Steve's
reaction was more
intense: cold sweats and
feelings of being out of
space and time.
Proof, once again, that
the desert offers many
chances to get away.
Santa
Monica-based freelance
writer Andrew Bender is
the author of several
Lonely Planet
guidebooks.
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